Description
Book SynopsisSteven French suggests a radical new approach to the understanding of quantum physics, derived from Husserl''s phenomenological philosophy. In 1939 two physicists, Fritz London and Edmund Bauer, published an account of measurement in quantum mechanics. Widely cited, their ''little book'' featured centrally in an important debate over the role of consciousness in that process. However, it has been fundamentally misunderstood, both in that debate and beyond. Steven French argues that London, in particular, approached the measurement process from the perspective of Husserlian phenomenology, which he had studied as a student and which he retained an interest in throughout his career. This casts his work with Bauer in an entirely novel light and suggests a radical alternative understanding of quantum mechanics in which consciousness still plays a role but one that is fundamentally different than previously conceived. Most interpretations of the theory approach it on the basis of the so-call
Table of ContentsPreface Acknowledgments 1: The Measurement Problem (Featuring the Usual Suspects) 2: The Orthodox Solution, Its History and Multiplicity 3: The Debate About Consciousness 4: Physical and Phenomenological Networks 5: The Epoché and the Ego 6: London and Bauer Revisited 7: Completing the Crisis 8: QBism and the Subjective Stance 9: Many Worlds, Many Minds, and (Many) Relations 10: Interpretation or Reconstruction? References Index